View allAll Photos Tagged DesignStudies
Seen in the BMW Museum, Munich, Germay. Taken with Sony A7 Mark 2 and the Sony FE 16-35mm F4 ZA OSS.
An exhibit at the British Motor Museum.
The Zanda is a styling model with a glassfibre body on a wooden frame. It was a sports car study designed by Harris Mann in 1969.
Car: Austin Zanda.
Date taken: 16th April 2024.
An exhibit at the British Motor Museum.
The Zanda is a styling model with a glassfibre body on a wooden frame. It was a sports car study designed by Harris Mann in 1969.
Car: Austin Zanda.
Date taken: 16th April 2024.
An exhibit at the British Motor Museum.
The Zanda is a styling model with a glassfibre body on a wooden frame. It was a sports car study designed by Harris Mann in 1969.
Car: Austin Zanda.
Date taken: 16th April 2024.
An exhibit at the British Motor Museum.
The Zanda is a styling model with a glassfibre body on a wooden frame. It was a sports car study designed by Harris Mann in 1969.
Car: Austin Zanda.
Date taken: 16th April 2024.
HipstamaticPhoto-363
Mia is doing a design project for school -
working with wooden strips, cardboard, perspex and bicycle spokes
An exhibit at the British Motor Museum.
The 9X was a design by Alec Issigonis intended as a replacement for the Mini.
Car: BMC Mini 9X prototype.
Engine: 850cc in-line 4.
Date taken: 16th April 2024.
An exhibit at the British Motor Museum.
The 9X was a design by Alec Issigonis intended as a replacement for the Mini.
Car: BMC Mini 9X prototype.
Engine: 850cc in-line 4.
Date taken: 16th April 2024.
An exhibit at the British Motor Museum.
The Zanda is a styling model with a glassfibre body on a wooden frame. It was a sports car study designed by Harris Mann in 1969.
Car: Austin Zanda.
Date taken: 16th April 2024.
Highest Position in Explore #241
While I was heading back from a business trip from Hamburg to Munich I took a shot here and there from the sunset. Clouds alone are nice of course, but in order to fill-up the shot a little bit I copied this object into the picture, which is in fact a design study exhibited at the Pinakothek der Moderne. Hope you like this little experiment.
See it large:
www.flickr.com/photo_zoom.gne?id=653076380&context=se...
Three B+W negatives shot with color filters were combined to give a color image.
It was a mildly breezy day, with clouds. The gentle sway of the trees between exposures and varying light intensity caused colored shadows. Movement of branches and leaves caused additional colored ghosting. I also moved around in the three photos to make structured ghosts (the blue one is easiest to see in the original size). Note that the stationary smokestack is properly colored only where the light is constant. Moving shadows/light give the rainbow on the left.
John James Audubon Center at Mill Grove, PA.
Here are more examples exploiting colored ghosting, a technique also known as the Harris shutter effect. Other attempts at color separation photography (trichromy) can be seen here.
Edit: Some have asked why the colors look different with this process than in an image from a common digital camera. The answer derives from the absorption profiles of the color filters used here vs those built into a camera sensor. Spectra for a typical Bayer array on a digital sensor can be compared to the Red 25, Green 58, and Blue 47B that I used. The blue 47B has a much narrower cutoff, excluding green light absorbed in the Bayer filter counterpart, and the red 25 has a longer wavelength cutoff, excluding some of the yellow absorbed by the Bayer filter counterpart. Note that there are several different filter configurations in use on consumer camera sensors, including three color RGB (red, green, blue) used in the example here, CMY (cyan, magenta, yellow), and a four color RGBE (red, green, blue, emerald) design. Each will give a different appearance to an image.
Edit 2
Jorg Piper's paper RGB-Splitting and Multi-Shot Techniques in Digital Photomicrography–Utilization of Astronomic RGB-Filters in True Color Imaging shows dramatic improvement in image quality when using RGB filters on a digital camera (Olympus Camedia C-7070).
An exhibit at the British Motor Museum.
The 9X was a design by Alec Issigonis intended as a replacement for the Mini.
Car: BMC Mini 9X prototype.
Engine: 850cc in-line 4.
Date taken: 16th April 2024.
best: "L"
seen in the Daimler-Museum, Stuttgart /
Mercedes-Benz F 400 Carving
The F 400 Carving was presented by Mercedes-Benz at the 2001 Tokyo Motor Show. It was used to test new dynamic handlicng control Systems in conjunction with active camber control.
20130308_1659_kw
A museum is only alive when people visit. This idea seemed best represented by colored ghosts of the live crowd in the black & white museum. Digital Harris shutter effect made by combining different RGB color layers from three sequentially shot frames.
For the curious, this is the Philadelphia, museum of art. The desaturated background was achieved by using color layers from images with different exposure values, effectively giving blue +1 EV, green +0 EV, and red -1 EV.
Edit: The method I think I used may be different than what I actually did. I don't have access to photoshop at the moment, so I can't verify this. The odd colors of the ghosts suggest I did something different. As noted by Hello, I am Bruce (below) the background is completely monochrome. This effect can be achieved by converting the source images to monochrome before further manipulation. Using these for the three color layers in the composite will give color where images differ (things moving), and B&W elsewhere. Look here for an example and description of method.
An exhibit at the British Motor Museum.
The 9X was a design by Alec Issigonis intended as a replacement for the Mini.
Car: BMC Mini 9X prototype.
Engine: 850cc in-line 4.
Date taken: 16th April 2024.
Read More at gimpmagazine.org/masterclass/
Do you want to improve your digital art designs? As a designer you have a split second to attract someone to your product, as it is competing with so many others. Or maybe this is for internal use such as business presentations? And you want people to buy into your ideas. Or maybe you just really enjoy digital arts as hobby and want to make the best of that? This course can help you with that and more! While I use open source software (GIMP, Inkscape and Scribus) in the tutorials, this course is easily interchangeable with commercial software such as Adobe PS, AI, ID, and PRE as many of the workflows are nearly identical. I have over 30 years of experience in design and I am sharing this with you. This course was over six months in the making and it is now available! This is a must course for beginners through advanced. Check out this course description HD video.
On the left: a design study of the batch of Dutch/Suisse diesel electric DMUs that started service in 1957 and ended their activities in 1974. Sold to Canada, five parts eventually came back to Europe and are now awaiting (in Amsterdam) a well deserved restauration.
On the right a model of Mat '36 of Netherlands Railways "streamline" trainsets.